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Bulgarian Canadians

Bulgarian Canadians (Bulgarian: канадски българи, kanadski balgari) are Canadian citizens or residents from Bulgaria or people of Bulgarian descent. According to the 2021 Census there were 33,085[1] Canadians who claimed Bulgarian ancestry, an increase compared to the 27,260[4] of the 2006 Census.

History[edit]

Origin and numbers[edit]

Mass Bulgarian emigration to Canada began in the late 1890s and the early 20th century. Bulgarians primarily settled in Canada's industrial cities, mostly Toronto, Ontario, which was a major centre of Bulgarian migration to North America. Between 1900 and 1944, 19,955 people from Bulgaria settled in Canada; however, this number excludes the mass Bulgarian migration from Ottoman and later Serbian and Greek-ruled Macedonia, Dobruja, southern Thrace, the Western Outlands and Bessarabia, which was indeed the bulk of Bulgarian emigration to Canada.[5] The largest wave of migration from the Kingdom of Bulgaria to Canada was in 1912, when 6,388 people arrived in that country. Other significant waves were those of 1914, consisting of 4,512 people, and 1907–09, which numbered 2,529.[6]


The Canadian Census of 1921 recorded 1,765 people who identified as Bulgarians; of those, 1,378 lived in Ontario. In 1931, self-identified Bulgarians were 3,160 (2,415 in Ontario), while in 1941 they numbered 3,260 (2,553 in Ontario).[7] Other estimates, however, list 10,000 Bulgarians in Canada by 1913, of which 4,000 in Toronto alone, and 20,000 Bulgarians in Canada by 1939.[3] The Bulgarian colony in Toronto mostly consisted of emigrants from Macedonia and the Kostur (Kastoria) region in particular. According to Bulgarian diplomatic and ecclesiastical records of 1936, Bulgarians in Toronto alone numbered 3,500, while other estimates go up to 5,000.[8]


The Bulgarian community in Canada is deeply linked to the Macedonian Canadians. Until World War II, most people who today identify as Macedonian Canadians claimed a Bulgarian ethnic identity and were recorded as part of the Bulgarian ethnic group.[3] In the 1980s and 1990s, the Bulgarian community in Canada spread in larger numbers to the capital Ottawa, Ontario, Vancouver, British Columbia and Montreal, Quebec.[9]

Organizations, religion and education[edit]

The first organization of Bulgarians in Canada, the Zhelevo Bulgarian Brotherhood[8] or Zhelevo Benevolence Brotherhood was established in 1907 in Toronto by emigrants from Zhelevo (Antartiko) in Aegean Macedonia. Other Bulgarian organizations were soon established by emigrants from Zagorichani (Vassiliada), Oshtima (Trigono), Smardesh (Krystallopigi), Gabresh (Gavros), Banitsa (Vevi), Buf (Akritas) and Tarsie (Trivuno), all villages in Aegean Macedonia.[8] Bulgarian emigrants from Murgash near Tsaribrod and Bansko also established emigrant organizations. Most such communities were founded in Toronto, though some were based in other Ontario towns like Kitchener, Windsor and Courtland.[8]


The foundations of the Bulgarian Orthodox community in Canada were laid down in 1908 with the first Bulgarian ecclesiastical mission in North America. The priests Hristo Karabashev and hieromonk Theophylactus, who first visited the United States, arrived in Toronto in 1910 and established what is today the Sts. Cyril and Methodius Macedono-Bulgarian[10] Orthodox Parish, which until 1945 remained the only such community in Canada.[11]


In 7 March 1957 the Bulgarian Canadian Society was found.[12]


A Bulgarian school, funded by the Bulgarian Orthodox community, was founded in Toronto as early as 1914: this was also the first Bulgarian school in the Americas. In 1924, this school had 70 pupils and two teachers. By 1928, the number of pupils was 100. Bulgarian adult schools were established by two separate organizations in 1917 and 1920, also in Toronto. Another school for children was founded in Toronto in 1934; Bulgarian schools were also established in Kitchener and Windsor in 1932 and 1936 respectively.[13]

Ken Boshcoff

Nansy Damianova

Nina Dobrev

Ivan Dochev

Alexandra Fol

Marian Grudeff

Ignat Kaneff

Ted Kotcheff

Ivan Kristoff

Mesut Mert

Alice Panikian

Kroum Pindoff

[14]

Mirela Rahneva

Ralitsa Tcholakova

Theodore Ushev

European Canadians

Bulgarian Americans

Immigration to Canada

Ethnic groups in Canada

Foreign relations of Bulgaria

Foreign relations of Canada

Bulgaria–Canada relations

Embassy of the Republic of Bulgaria in Ottawa

Bulgarian diaspora

Bulgarian Eastern Orthodox Diocese of the USA, Canada and Australia

Колев, Йордан (2005). Българите извън България (in Bulgarian). София: Тангра ТанНакРа. pp. 294–305.  954-9942-73-2.

ISBN

Magocsi, Paul R. (1999). Encyclopedia of Canada's peoples. University of Toronto Press. pp. 287–293.  0-8020-2938-8.

ISBN

Peykovska, P. (2022). (in Bg). - In: Migration and Social Development, Vol. 2, Sofia: BAS IHS, pp. 15-64. ISBN 978-954-2903-54-3

The First Generations of Bulgarians in Canada

Bulgarite v Canada

Bulway Bulgarian Canadians

BG Toronto

BG Canada

National Capital Region Bulgarian Community Ottawa – Gatineau, Canada

Bulgarian–Canadian Society of British Columbia, Vancouver

Archived 2014-05-18 at the Wayback Machine

Macedonian Tribune, Bulgarian newspaper issued out of Toronto

Bulgarian embassy in Ottawa

Bulgarian honorary consulate in Montreal

Bulgarian consulate in Toronto

Canadian Foreign Affairs and International Trade Office about the relations with Bulgaria